A Memoir of Music and Transformation
by Vijay Gupta
Violinist Vijay Gupta's searing memoir of prodigy, ambition, collapse, and renewal reveals how music is not just performance but also survival, a lifeline of human connection—for readers of Jeremy Denk's Every Good Boy Does Fine, Hua Hsu's Stay True, and Patrick Bringley's All the Beauty in the World.
By age twenty-five, Vijay Gupta had lived several lifetimes: he played Carnegie Hall at eight, studied at Juilliard and Yale before most had finished high school, joined the Los Angeles Philharmonic at nineteen, gave a celebrated TED Talk seen by millions, and launched a nonprofit. But behind the accolades was estrangement, addiction, and a private unraveling.
Restrung is Gupta's unflinching memoir of breaking apart and remaking a self. It begins with a boy raised between the strict devotion of Bengali immigrant parents and the ruthless demands of the conservatory. It follows him through the shimmering world of elite orchestras, into the depths of burnout, and ultimately toward an unexpected reawakening—where he discovered that the music he'd spent his life studying was seen not as a curio of high culture or mere entertainment, but a lifeline of connection—most vividly in Skid Row, where people living through addiction, homelessness, and incarceration heard it as survival itself.
There, audiences spoke to how they saw their own lives reflected in the stories of composers too often frozen into marble busts: the rage of Beethoven, the fragility of Schumann's mind, the alienation of Bartók, the plight of Handel—who wrote Messiah bankrupt, ill, and broken, yet transformed despair into an enduring Hallelujah.
Restrung unsettles assumptions about success while illuminating how art restores not just audiences, but artists themselves.
"With an open heart and sometimes brutal self-awareness, Gupta effectively illustrates how music 'reaches the broken places within us and the broken places between us.' It's a virtuoso performance." —Publishers Weekly
"Gupta writes as beautifully as he plays, and he shares all his doubts, painful relationships, and well-intentioned moments. The real gift here is his ability to also relay his connections with music and his audience. This is magical." ―Booklist
"Restrung is a singular, transfixing document of Vijay Gupta's mission to make music in a way that matters to people who live on society's margins. In place of comfortable clichés about the healing powers of art, Gupta gives us a vision that is at once brutally honest and passionately hopeful. Every page burns with moral conviction." ―Alex Ross, author of The Rest Is Noise
"What an astonishing courageous symphonic book. Restrung is a true gift—to be cherished to be talked about to be shared with everyone you know." ―Junot Diaz, author of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao
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Vijay Gupta is an acclaimed violinist and the founding Artistic Director of Street Symphony, the nonprofit that brings live music into shelters, clinics, jails, and prisons, hailed by The New Yorker as "a formidable new model for how musical institutions should engage with the world around them." A former member of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, a MacArthur Fellow, and named to TIME's 100 Next list, Gupta has shared the role of music in human connection and responsibility on stages, campuses, and with organizations across the nation, including The Richmond Forum, the American Medical Association, the U.S. Psychiatric Congress, Harvard Business School, and companies such as Accenture and Hallmark. He lives in Altadena, California.

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